Give Dad gift of forgiveness on Father's Day

DIANE CAMERON

Published 1:00 am, Saturday, June 19, 2010

In the book, "Alcoholics Anonymous," Bill Wilson wrote, "Resentment is the number one offender." You might expect the founder of AA to say that booze or too much drinking was the big problem. But no, Wilson, 20th-century self-made philosopher and self-made alcoholic, knew better.

He continued in the same paragraph, "From resentment flows all forms of spiritual disease."

Most of us know that, but it's hard to get unstuck when a good, juicy resentment takes hold of you, so I like this pithier saying: "Holding a resentment is like setting yourself on fire and hoping the other person dies of smoke inhalation."

Resentment as a topic as Father's Day approaches? But of course.

All of us had fathers. And with today's social changes -- divorce and remarriage -- some of us have two or more, so there's plenty of fuel for those fires. Our parents disappoint us and we, in our turn, disappoint our children. In some families the injuries are bad: Fathers may abuse, abandon, deprive or neglect. What do you do when you smell the smoke?

The antidote to resentment is, of course, forgiveness. Perhaps that will be the theme for some sermons tomorrow and surely a forgiveness story will show up on the Hallmark Channel as well. But life is not a made-for-TV movie, so how do you save yourself from the heat of resentment?

I had to extinguish a fiery resentment that I carried for years about my father. When I was young, my dad worked many hours, traveled a lot, left us with my mother, who was ill, and then died young.

I had a big box of matches and I struck them all over myself. I had this idea that I just didn't get what I needed from my father. More than one therapist agreed that my "issues" did indeed come from that deprivation. That intellectual understanding helped me to a certain degree but it also functioned as dry tinder for my favorite fire.

Then a few years ago on a retreat, I was telling my story and the retreat leader gave me a surprising bit of redirection.

I was telling her how my dad had maybe given me 30 to 40 percent of what I needed as a kid and, well, poor me and bad him.

"Well, yes," the retreat leader said, "He may have only given you 40 percent percent of what you needed but what if 40 percent was all he had?" (He was a man whose parents died when he was young. He had grown up in poverty and he'd never been given a minute of emotional resource he could rely on).

"So, she continued, "when your dad gave you that 40 percent, he was really giving you 100 percent of what he had."

It was like a bucket of cold water poured on my head.

A proverb says: "A father is a son's first hero and a daughter's first love." And human nature says that a father is likely to be a son or daughter's first disappointment.

To forgive does not mean to pardon, it means to let go. Jesus, another great teacher, said, "Forgive them for they know not what they do." In his language, Aramaic, he used the word shaw for forgive; shaw means "to untie."

So if you have tied yourself to a resentment that is pulling you down -- or if like me you set yourself on fire with victim-approved matches -- untie yourself. Forgive your father and free yourself.

Forgiveness makes a great Father's Day gift. You give it to yourself.

Diane Cameron is a Capital Region writer. Her e-mail address is dcameron6@nycap.rr.com.